Basically, im trying to find a part time or an internship (im in germany, i dont mind remote though) because my university starts in April after i write my exams in December (and hopefully pass)

I have been programming as a hobby for a few years now, freelancing and whatnot, but now i wanna find a job for the next 6 months or more as i have nothing much to do till then

I cant freelance here anymore as i need a license which is a pain to gwt as a student i heard, and freelancing wouldnt make me enough money to survive as it would be hard to find jobs

Ive been doing python and rust, and i know C and Javascript well enough too I did the basics of arm assembly at some point for fun too(wasnt fun)

Basically, where do i go about finding any jobs? I have no leads

  • @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    Given that you’re studying, apply to any software company as a “Werkstudent”. You can work up to 40 hours per week during periods without lectures, up to 20 hours otherwise. The benefits of that versus normal employment are reduced taxes for you and the company. Companies usually do that and also invest in upskilling you in the hope of being able to hire you later. Look up different companies located close to you and just apply.

    Source: I worked like that for a small webdev company and than a rather big company til 2021.

    Out of curiosity, what license do need?

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Thank you for the answer!

        I’d contact a tax consultant to decide which way to go (Freelancing or a registered business). They will also help you in case of problems with the Finanzamt.

        You have to pay taxes (Gewerbesteuer) only if you’re making more than 24500 € in profit. It does not sound like OP will make anywhere near that, so there’s no harm in getting a “Gewerbeanmeldung” (registering a business) and being able to sell things as well. It costs 30-100 € depending on where you’re living

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            You should submit a tax declaration regardless. Either it’s required, or you’ll most likely receive a refund. So no, there is no harm; on the contrary.

            Since the original poster likely won’t do this anyway, this discussion is pointless.

            As a takeaway message: Just submit your tax declaration, even as a working student. In most cases, you’ll get some money back. And send it to your Finanzamt (tax office), not the IRS. The US won’t process your German tax declaration.

            Cheers

    • @aman25taOP
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      11 year ago

      I did try and look around for some werkstudent jobs but almost all of them are java or c# (which im willing to learn, but don’t know yet except like a hello world which isnt much)

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        There’s no need to be perfect. Just apply, you’ll learn most on the job. Languages are just tools and most are similar, especially in the java, c#, js, python world. You can also take the initiative and apply to companies without open Werkstudent positions

        • @aman25taOP
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          11 year ago

          tbf what i have learnt has all come from just doing stuff, either for self or friends or freelance jobs and so

          I just assumed i shouldnt apply as i had no experience in them but i guess ill try anyway?